Re: [IRCA] [NRC-AM] Low Noon MW bandscan from N Oklahoma
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Re: [IRCA] [NRC-AM] Low Noon MW bandscan from N Oklahoma



When I did a bandscan on my Sony SRF59 Walkman, I was able to hear 580 from
Topeka, 590 from Omaha and a bunch of others.. the one I was mildly
surprised at was 620 from Sioux City.. only 1KW.

I will do a more complete bandscan one day.

Paul Walker
www.onairdj.com


On 11/29/08, Glenn Hauser <wghauser@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> MW bandscan from a quiet rural location several km N of Enid OK, a dead-end
> E of US 81 into the Quail Meadows addition, Nov 29, shortly after local mean
> noon which is 1832 UT, on Nissan caradio, nondirexional antenna, uncovered a
> few interesting things.
>
> This is about a week before our latest sunrise and another month before our
> earliest sunset. How much skywave will make it, and what are the limits of
> groundwave in this high-ground-conductivity area? Distances are approximate.
>
> 660, weak signal under KSKY Dallas, 1910 with talk mentioning Omaha; makes
> SAH of slightly under 2 Hz, counted at 116/minute. This frequency has been
> difficult because of WWLS-640 IBOC always QRMing KSKY, yes, on
> second-adjacent. Omaha NE is now KCRO 1 kW, vs 20 kW from somewhat closer
> KSKY.
>
> 670, at 1853, mix of two stations, no doubt KLTT Denver, 700 km, and WSCR
> Chicago 1100 km. KLTT is a regular weak signal here yearound in daytime. The
> other one was going thru some slow selective fading. At 1902 obviously KLTT
> with religion, WSCR with sports talk.
>
> 720, WGN at 1852, Saturday Noon Show with the immediately recognizable
> Orion Samuelson. Quite steady signal, so is it ground or skywave at 1100 km?
> At 1901, music in Spanish was overtaking WGN, 1.5 Hz SAH, no doubt KSAH
> Universal City (San Antonio) TX, 800 km, same station which messes up our
> WGN reception at night. 1918, WGN dominating again, now in Your Money
> call-in show.
>
> Nothing much happening on the X-band, e.g. 1690 Chicago? Just a trace of
> something; so do we have a low-band-only noontime skywave opening, or is
> this all groundwave? Per the NRC Pattern Book 2006, KSAH has different
> antenna patterns day and night but both have a null toward Chicago.
> Unfortunately, we are somewhat off that direct line and KSAH may also be out
> of whack.
>
> 840, at 1909, local weather by YL, Monday`s high 40; more info at
> http://www.kticam.com and ``840 Country KTIC`` ID. Website gives slogan
> instead as Rural Radio. This is West Point NE near Omaha, the closest 840 to
> here, 600 km, about half the distance to WHAS. Probably groundwave; see 660.
> KFAB-1110 is also audible any day.
>
> 850, at 1908 KOA ID in passing over music from TX station. Less than
> KLTT-670, KOA Denver CO barely makes it here in daytime by groundwave.
>
> 1100, hoping for WZFG Fargo if they are back to 50 kW fullpower, but
> instead had usual fringe daytime dominator, KKLL Joplin MO, 350 km; after
> instrumental excerpt from America The Beautiful, outro for program named
> Radio Liberty? At 1859 string of maybe a dozen legal IDs for stations in AR,
> MO and IL at least, with KKLL somewhere in the middle of the list. However,
> at 1915 there was a fast SAH, maybe sports talk under country/gospel music?
> Most likely KDRY Alamo Heights (San Antonio) TX, judging from 1200 definite,
> 720. Is the 50 kW 1100 in Louisiana on the air yet? I still have hopes for
> pulling WZFG by daytime skywave if not groundwave, by latching onto a N/S
> defacto fence Beverage around here, but that may also bring up KDRY instead.
>
> 1200, at 1858 fast SAH between two very weak signals, but at 1907 WOAI ID
> in passing, just barely audible, and fading. Fortunately, not strong enough
> to carry any significant IBOC with it, and I could still hear KGYN 1210, and
> TX/KS on 1190.
>
> 1540, at 1856 car talk show over a weaker signal. 1904 in ABC News, ID
> ``Talk Radio 1540, KNGL, McPherson`` (Kansas), local weather. I was looking
> for KXEL Waterloo IA, heard a few days earlier but a sesquihour later,
> dominating 1540 by skywave, and this faked me out with the same slogan.
>
> Other notes: IBOC from OK stations ruined the following: 630, 650, 990,
> 1010, 1160, 1180, 1290, 1310. A pair of deer loped by at 1914.
>
> This was a MW mini-DXpedition, but on the way back I tuned around FM, and
> confirmed that 99.7 is still vacant, awaiting the Mustang OK station to come
> on, having been hijacked from Enid/Alva as KZLS. BTW, KZLS has modified CP
> to be 39 kW/154 m rather than 25 kW/100 m, but still a lot less than the
> original station KXLS near Helena halfway between Enid and Alva, later
> renamed KNID, which was 100 kW ERP at 256 meters AAT.
>
> 99.7 was so vacant that I heard a couple of nice meteor bursts at 1924 and
> 1927 plus several weaker ones in a 5-minute period. Welcome, Geminids?
> (Glenn Hauser, Enid OK, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
>
>
>
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>



-- 
Sincerely,
Paul B. Walker, Jr.
www.onairdj.com
walkerbroadcasting@xxxxxxxxx
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